LANGUAGE AND CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY II
cod. 1005318

Academic year 2014/15
1° year of course - First semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Filosofia e teoria dei linguaggi (M-FIL/05)
Field
Istituzioni di filosofia
Type of training activity
Characterising
30 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: -
course unit
in - - -

Integrated course unit module: LANGUAGE AND CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY

Learning objectives

Evolving an ability to analyze the presented texts and discuss them in the light of different interpretations.(I)
Evolving the ability to produce a written text on some aspect of Wittgenstein's philosophy and to present it critically in a well-argued way.(II)
Acquiring some degree of autonomy of judgment and a good level of clarity in communication.
Becoming able to integrate the lectures and the texts with a personal examination of the secondary literature on the relevant topics (III,IV,V)

Prerequisites

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Course unit content

Module 2: 6 cfu.
«Work on philosophy is... rather work on oneself, on one's own way of thinking». This module will present different readings of this sentence from Wittgenstein's text "Philosophy": issues will be the role of the first person as well as ethical and aesthetical consequences of philosophical understanding.

Full programme

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Bibliography

- R. Monk, How to Read Wittgenstein, W.W.Norton & Company, 2005.
- L. Wittgenstein, Tractatus logico-philosophicus, Einaudi, 1995.
- L. Wittgenstein, Ricerche filosofiche, Einaudi, 1995.
- L. Wittgenstein, Lezioni e conversazioni sull'etica, l'estetica e la credenza religiosa, Adelphi,1980.
- L. Wittgenstein, Filosofia, Donzelli, 1996.
- Paolo Tripodi, Dimenticare Wittgenstein, Il Mulino, 2009.
- J. Conant , C. Diamond, Rileggere Wittgenstein, Carocci, 2010.
- A.A.V.V., Wittgenstein, l'estetica e le arti, Carocci 2013.
- McGinn M. and Kuusela O.(eds), The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein, Oxford University Press, 2011 - selected articles.
- G.Hagberg, Wittgenstein’s Aesthetics, 2007 (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/wittgenstein-aesthetic).

Teaching methods

The course will mostly consist of lectures. In addition, topics will be suggested for written papers and oral presentations, to be discussed in class.

Assessment methods and criteria

The exam comes in two parts: (a) a written paper on one of the topics that were presented in the lectures, (b) an oral examination including questions on the materials covered in the course as well as discussion of the written paper.
Final evaluation will reflect
- command of the course contents
- ability to critically elaborate on them
- expository and argumentative abilities.


Non-attending students are invited to get in touch with the professor to agree on a paper topic and on further bibliography.

Other information

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